44 Sexuality & Culture / Winter 2004 DEFINING THE EMOTIONAL CONTOURS OF EXOTIC DANCE Kari Lerum University of Washington, Bothell ([email protected]) Recent years have witnessed a surge of investigative and reflective writings about sex work, many by sex workers themselves. Katherine Frank and Elisabeth Eaves’ books are recent additions to this growing field of study. In G-Strings and Sympathy: Strip Club Regulars and Male Desire, Katherine Frank analyzes the contexts and meanings of strip clubs for heterosexual male clients. In Bare: On Women, Dancing, Sex, and Power, Elisabeth Eaves re- counts her experiences as a peep show dancer and stripper. Though covering similar territory, their analytic paths diverge widely. As a reader at the cross- roads of choosing either book, the choice is a matter of intellectual standards, taste, and purpose. Since the publication of Sex Work: Writings by Women in the Sex Industry (Delecoste & Alexander, 1987), an amazing surge of writings about sex work—most notably by sex workers them- selves—have surfaced in many academic and literary arenas. The recent books by Katherine Frank and Elisabeth Eaves are the latest arrivals in this exciting surge of sex worker self-definition and au- thority. Both authors take on the topic of strip clubs: Katherine Frank (2002) describes and analyzes the perspective of heterosexual male strip club regulars, and Elisabeth Eaves (2002) delves into the motivations of strippers including herself. Both books illustrate a variety of angles, styles, and qualities, all of which contribute to an evolving set of stories being told about the experience of sex work in the United States at the turn of the twenty-first century. Sexuality & Culture, Winter 2004, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 44-52. 44 Defining the Emotional Contours of Exotic Dance 45 Katherine Frank’s book, G-Strings and Sympathy, is a revised version of her dissertation for which she was awarded her Ph.D. in cultural anthropology at Duke University. Over the course of four- teen months Frank worked as a nude entertainer in five strip clubs in a Southeastern city she refers to as Laurelton. (This work is supplemented by Frank’s experience as a nude entertainer over the course of six years. Frank selected strip clubs that varied on a con- tinuum of “classiness” but offered comparable services. Namely, each of the five clubs offered nude table dancing, as opposed to offering only nude stage dancing, or offering lap dancing but pro- hibiting the sale of alcohol. Frank also conducted in-depth inter- views with thirty men who regularly patronized one or more of these clubs. In this book Frank focuses her analytic spotlight on heterosexual men for whom strip club attendance is a regular part of their lives. Frank is particularly interested in understanding “the American male customer who explicitly does not want direct sexual release” (p. xxiii). Franks states that “a significant population of heterosexual American males ... are willing to spend their money on such a pub- lic, voyeuristic (although interactive) fantasy” (p. xxiii). While the marketing of sexual voyeurism is not limited to the American mar- ketplace, Frank observes that doing this without the expectation of sexual release is a “particularity of the American male customer” (p. xxiii) and hence worthy of in-depth analysis. Frank proceeds to do so with a great deal of analytic sophistication, including her inclusion of three short fictional stories as means to explore alterna- tive dimensions of her analysis. In framing the analysis for G-Strings and Sympathy Frank uti- lizes macro level social theories of capitalism, consumerism, lei- sure, and tourism. Locating her study of strip clubs within the social landscape of “late capitalism” where “more and more forms of en- tertainment become preoccupied with the commodification of spec- tacle and experience” (xxv), Frank also suggests that strip club patronage is a form of contemporary leisure, a touristic practice common among privileged “travelers.” Once contextualizing con- temporary strip clubs are contextualized within this frame, Frank continues her analysis by calling upon an impressive interdiscipli- 46 Sexuality & Culture / Winter 2004 nary array of social theory including micro level, psychoanalytic perspectives on the dynamics of marriage, monogamy, and jeal- ousy for strip club regulars. Though sometimes juggling quite dis- parate (and even contradictory) analytics, Frank succeeds in describing social worlds that are always multiply constituted, al- ways operating within both macro and micro influences. In addition to these rich theoretical perspectives Frank describes several interesting empirical patterns arising in her interviews with customers. For example, Frank’s interviewees consistently referred to their strip club experiences as “relaxing” or as a “release.” It appears that this is primarily a social, not a physical, release from social anxieties and expectations, as strip clubs enabled “safe op- portunities for interactions with women without the risk of rejec- tion” (p. 110), releasing the men from both social and sexual performance anxiety. Strip clubs also enabled interviewees to feel released from changing gender rules, especially those espousing the end to male privilege. While Frank acknowledges an obvious “backlash” mentality within this sentiment, she cautions against concluding that men go to strip clubs simply to regain a sense of power over women, as men demonstrated a variety of motivations in visiting strip clubs. Several times throughout the book Frank also provides a fasci- nating look into the relationship between strip clubs and what she refers to as the practice of marriage. For instance, many of Frank’s interviewees see strip clubs as “supportive of heterosexual mo- nogamy (although pushing it at its borders)” (p. 106), since sexual release is (usually) not part of the bargain, and since the relation- ship between customer and stripper are (usually) confined within the walls of the club. Even so, most of these men had wives/part- ners who disapproved of their strip club habits, setting up a dy- namic of secrecy between themselves and their partners. In an age where emotional honesty is touted as key to a successful relation- ship such a dynamic is typically considered dysfunctional, but Frank proposes that some marriages may be “successful” (especially in terms of longevity) precisely due to a lack of need for complete emotional honesty. Defining the Emotional Contours of Exotic Dance 47 In light of the men’s justifications for secrecy it is ironic that many of them were preoccupied with the authenticity of the dancer/ customer exchange (an irony that Franks does not mention or pur- sue). The men interpreted the meaning of these exchanges in a variety of ways, with some seeing the monetary exchange as facili- tating an authentic opportunity for connection, others becoming very cynical and gaining satisfaction from their ability to identify men who were being “duped.” Given the customer’s expectation for an authentic connection, Frank reports, dancers engage in a variety of techniques including giving out their “real” names and phone numbers to customers (knowing that most of the men will never call). In some ways the portrait that emerges of these regular clients harkens back to the subjects of Laud Humphrey’s study of “tea- room trade” (the practice of anonymous sex between men in public bathrooms). In his study Humphreys (1975) found that a signifi- cant proportion of men who participated in the tearooms were mar- ried, socially and politically conservative men, who in their home and work life symbolically adorned themselves with a “Breastplate of Righteousness.” Similarly, Frank reports that the regulars she observed and interviewed were by and large conservative men who were secretive about their visits, at least one of whom was explic- itly concerned about maintaining an “upstanding” image. This in- terviewee, for example, “had no desire to end a relationship that he regarded as successful and as a ‘model’ for his children” (p. 248). However even if most of Frank’s interviewees did not explicitly express concern with public righteousness, many of them did find that the secrecy of their encounters heightened the excitement of going to strip clubs. Frank analyzes this dynamic primarily from a psychoanalytic perspective, specifically drawing upon the concept of “triangulation.” The language used here is murky and difficult, but Frank’s point is that the stripper can serve as an insecure, de- fensive Oedipal fantasy for the wife/partner (with the stripper as her imagined rival) and/or as a revengeful, aggressive Oedipal fan- tasy for the customer (with the man imagining his wife competing with the stripper, thus saving him from having to compete with his own imagined rival). 48 Sexuality & Culture / Winter 2004 For me these sections on the meanings and practices of contem- porary heterosexual monogamy were possibly the richest and yet most frustrating. I remain unconvinced at the need for such specu- lative, unqualified psychoanalytic theory; despite her claims to the contrary, Frank does seem to rely here on assumptions of an essen- tial “unconscious,” as well as heterosexist assumptions about what constitutes a “rival.” Instead I would have preferred to see more exploration of social psychological analysis, or at least less socially insulated psychoanalysis, as this could have offered as much, if not more, explanatory power while remaining in closer reach of Frank’s actual empirical data. In sum, G-Strings and Sympathy brings extraordinary empirical and theoretical substance to what is generally a void of speculation over the motivations of strip club customers. Frank’s theoretical treatment allows for some empirical generalizations, yet her rich, in-depth look at a particular type of sex work customer also guards against a replication of existing generalizations/stereotypes. Frank’s broad use of academic literature is also impressive and generally very useful, but I would have also liked to see more of her own analysis, which at times gets buried under the multitude of other theorists.
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